The Kichwa Language

Today, as many people celebrate the “Indigenous Peoples Day” we want to give you an insight a language spoken in the Amazon of Ecuador: The language of the Kichwa. The indigenous people of this culture, who originally are from the highlands, have lived for centuries in the Amazon. They mostly live at the Napo River. Before the Incas conquered Ecuador, many different languages were spoken, but Kichwa was already an important commerce language. After the Inca’s conquest, Kichwa became the main language of Ecuador’s highlands. As above mentioned, the Kichwas of the jungle originally came from the highlands and they speak this same language, though in their own dialect. In the Ecuadorian Amazon there are about 60,000 Kichwa speakers today, some of the older people do not even speak any Spanish. People of the younger generations are often bilingual, whereas some children do not speak Kichwa anymore. Several efforts are being made, also in the highlands, to preserve ancestral languages. The unification of the Kichwa language and the creation of their own form of writing was an important step. Before, the language for many centuries was written in the form that the Christian missionaries thought it should be written – Kichwa per se was an oral language, no written forms existed. Now, the Spanish letters have been replaced, and the written form is closer to its phonetic realization.

SOME PHRASES: alli punsha – Good morning ashka pakrachu – Thank you very much shuk punshakama – Goodbye sachama purinkichik – You are going into the forest rukukuna achka shimita yachan – The elders know many words wawakuna achka mikun – The children eat a lot alli makiwa sawlita hapini – I take the machete with my right hand